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ON THE MOVE KEVIN RYAN JOINS WGI IN THE WEST PALM BEACH OFFICE WGI is pleased to announce that Kevin Ryan joined the firm’s Geospatial Division as a senior survey technician in its West Palm Beach headquarters. Ryan comes to WGI with more than 30 years of land surveying experience, with specific expertise in public utilities, transportation, and commercial land title surveys. Ryan is a formerly registered Professional
Land Surveyor in the State of Maryland. As a multidisciplinary solutions-providing consulting firm, WGI has 18 offices in six states, serving an active client base in over 30 states, specializing in the following disciplines: land development/municipal engineering, traffic and transportation engineering, parking solutions, geospatial services, subsurface utility engineering, structures, landscape architecture, environmental sciences,
architecture, land planning, MEP engineering, and creative services. Zweig Group ranked WGI No. 11 on its 2018 Hot Firms list and No. 23 on the 2018 Best Firms to Work For list. South Florida Business Journal ranked WGI No. 3 (up from No. 5) on its 2019 Top 25 Engineering Firms. In 2018, ENR ranked WGI No. 250 on its list of the Top 500 Design Firms, No. 24 on its Top Southeast Design Firms, and No. 10 in the Florida market.
JOAN DELOREY & JARED MAXWELL, from page 9
new construction materials/methods (61 percent), public-pri- vate partnerships (28 percent), and increase in design-build (22 percent). Besides tracking trends and maintaining underwriting discipline, many professional liability insurers continue to focus on innovation. In preparing for their policy renewals, AEC firms might check their insurance advisors about new coverage solutions to address their specific needs, including: ❚ ❚ M&A policy endorsement. Irrespective of a target firm’s project mix, disciplines or geography, any deal is likely to have an impact on the acquiring AEC firm’s premium. Some profes- sional liability insurers now offer special coverage endorse- ments enabling AEC firms to make an acquisition (subject to a defined percentage of current revenue) with no premium increase until the next policy renewal. ❚ ❚ Multi-year or automatic renewals. Some insurers now offer two- or three-year policies to smaller firms with up to $2 million in annual revenues. While each insurer has differ- ent criteria for qualification, growing firms can lock in their premium rather than potentially experiencing a premium increase due to revenue growth. Additionally, a few insurers now offer automatic annual renewals for small firms whereby the same coverage and premium terms are provided prior to renewal without the need for added underwriting. ❚ ❚ Client- or project-specific additional and/or excess lim- its. The need for AEC firms to obtain additional limits due to client contract requirements is more prevalent now than in prior years. Most insurers now can offer higher overall limits and endorsements to bump up coverage for a given project or client, providing a cost-effective approach to address these requirements. Given the continued soft insurance market conditions, AEC firms with favorable loss experience and/or less risky services may potentially see little to no increase in their premium rates this year. Even so, change in billings, whether through organic growth or acquisition, is likely to have an impact on a design firm’s premium calculations. Meanwhile, individual insurers are continuing to develop new solutions to address AEC firms’ evolving needs for protection. To obtain a complimentary copy of the Ames & Gough Survey, PLI Market 2019: Insurers Achieve Strong Growth Despite Competition and Flat Rates, email info@ amesgough.com. JOAN DELOREY is senior vice president and partner and JARED MAXWELL is vice president and partner at Ames & Gough. They can be reached at jdelorey@amesgough.com and jmaxwell@amesgough.com.
claims and working with their attorneys, insurance advisors and carriers to manage any claims that occur. Further, in ad- vance of their professional liability insurance policy renewals, design firms with large claims should be prepared to explain any losses to their insurers, including steps taken to avoid any recurrence. ❚ ❚ Condos, residential projects may trigger rate hikes. Of the insurers surveyed, 67 percent identified type of project as a top factor for raising a firm’s premium rates. Thus, AEC firms need to be aware of how underwriters view their project mix. Nearly all the insurers surveyed (16 of 18) view condo- miniums as the riskiest projects, followed by other residential projects, bridges and tunnels, large public facilities (such as airports, stadiums, and convention centers), and K-12 schools. Design firms with these projects should examine their risk management and loss experience and work with their insurance advisors to shore up any deficiencies. They should also assess how taking on this kind of work through organic growth or acquisition might affect their insurance programs and costs. ❚ ❚ Higher risk disciplines: Structural engineering and geo- technical. Among insurers surveyed, 39 percent pointed to high-risk disciplines as a reason for raising rates on individual AEC firms. More specifically, 16 of 18 ranked structural engi- neering – and 13 of 18, geotechnical engineering – among the top three disciplines in terms of significant underwriting risk, followed by architectural, process engineering and land sur- veying. Clearly, design firms with large investments in these disciplines, and those acquiring such firms, need to maintain a sharp focus on risk management. Any related claims are likely to be more severe and, consequently, may trigger more substantial premium increases at renewal. ❚ ❚ Insurers flag certain regions for claims volume. Some in- surers cite geography as a key consideration for potential rate increases. Among the 39 percent of insurers surveyed that ex- perienced greater claims activity in specific areas, 71 percent had more claims in the Southeast and 29 percent, each, in the Northeast and West Coast. AEC firms with operations or projects in these areas might double-check their related risk management practices and carefully track their loss trends. ❚ ❚ Insurers monitoring judicial rulings, other issues. In terms of their near- and longer-term risk management, de- sign firms may want to stay on top of emerging developments being watched by their insurers. When asked to rate their level of concern about various risk trends they are monitor- ing from an underwriting perspective, the insurers surveyed appeared most concerned (72 percent) about judicial rulings eroding protections for design firms under state statutes, such as economic loss doctrine. Other key concerns include:
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THE ZWEIG LETTER May 13, 2019, ISSUE 1296
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